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4 The Soil

4 The Soil Partners: Supporting Farmers in Senegal and Learning Lessons for Virginia

Updated: Apr 21


People standing and kneeling outdoors looking at a soil sample in a bucket
Photo courtesy of Virginia Cooperative Extension

"4 The Soil" aims to connect soil health champions across the world, so we are thrilled to share the publication below by Lydia Fitzgerald, Virginia Tech and Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Partnership Soil Health and Integrated Conservation Agronomist and of Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences. Lydia joined us for Episode 22-16 of our podcast 4 The Soil: A Conversation. This article was originally published by Virginia Cooperative Extension.


Lydia traveled with Ozzie Abaye, a highly acclaimed professor of crop and soil environmental sciences at the Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and Virginia Cooperative Extension specialist. We want to highlight and congratulate Ozzie for her appointment as the Thomas B. Hutcheson Jr. Professor of Agronomy by the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors in October 2023. Thank you, Lydia and Ozzie, for your incredible partnership-building and soil health work!



Supporting Farmers in Senegal and Learning Lessons for Virginia


By Lydia Fitzgerald, Virginia Tech and NRCS Partnership Soil Health and Integrated Conservation Agronomist, Virginia Tech School of Plant and Environmental Sciences


Working with farmers to build their soil, boost economic sustainability, and increase agronomic productivity has always been my passion. That is why I was thrilled to have the opportunity to travel to Senegal with Ozzie Abaye, a professor in the School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, during the summer of 2023 to work in partnership with Counterpart International on the McGovern-Dole Food for Education Program. 


In my current role as the first Virginia Tech and Natural Resources Conservation Service Partnership Soil Health and Integrated Conservation Agronomist, I am fortunate to partner with and work alongside farmers, NRCS staff, VCE agents, the Virginia Soil Health Coalition, and many other organizations to promote soil health and integrated conservation agronomy. Last year, we hosted a train-the-trainer Dig and Demo Program. I took the concepts, demonstrations, and teaching style from the Dig and Demo course and adapted them to train facilitators in Senegal who then trained local farmers. 


It was incredible to work with the Senegalese farmers and hear about their experiences in implementing conservation practices. It was eye-opening to see how even in a drastically different climate, cropping system, and culture soil health principles still held. While the practices were different from what I was used to, the principles stayed the same. It is impossible to describe the inspiration that comes from seeing a farmer have an “ah-hah” moment when they connect their real-life experiences to the soil health principles and science behind them. 





One workshop activity was a soil show and tell session. Each farmer brought a handful of soil and told the story behind it. They shared how they had seen their soils and crop yields change over time as they adopted practices that kept the soil covered, minimized disturbance, maximized living roots, and energized diversity. This was one of the most impactful activities, which reinforced one guiding principle that I have learned — relationships are powerful! It is not always what you know but who you know and trust. 


For me, a pivotal moment occurred when reflecting on the workshops. Abaye shared her perspective, based on more than 30 years of agricultural development work, stating that we tend to focus on empowering our audience, which is a good thing. However, we must listen to our audience to ensure that we are aware of their capacity to utilize the additional knowledge and skills that we equip them with. This applies to work done in Senegal and in Virginia. We must promote understanding to empower farmers, but we must also ensure we are working alongside producers to help, not hinder.  


My experience in Senegal working with Counterpart International and Abaye reinforced many key principles and introduced a fresh perspective on educating and providing Extension programming.  


You must listen to understand so that you can engage with people in their context.  

You must understand the local context to create and nurture relationships.  


You must establish trusting relationships to cultivate impactful education and Extension programming. 


This piece was originally published by Virginia Cooperative Extension on December 1, 2023.

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